
Toyota 1KZ-TE Cylinder Head Identification Guide
How to Identify the Correct Cylinder Head & Prevent Future Failure
Why This Matters
One of the most expensive mistakes made during a 1KZ rebuild is ordering the wrong cylinder head.
Toyota produced two different valve configurations, and because these engines are now over 25 years old, many have already had replacement heads installed.
Do not assume your engine still has its original cylinder head.
The Two Cylinder Head Types
Flush Valve Cylinder Head (Long Valve)
Identification
- Valve faces sit almost perfectly flush with the cylinder head surface.
- Used with pistons that have valve reliefs (cut-outs).
- If your pistons have valve pockets, this is the cylinder head you need.
1 mm Below Surface Cylinder Head (Short Valve)
Identification
- Valve faces sit approximately 1 mm below the machined cylinder head surface.
- Used with pistons that do not have valve reliefs.
- If your pistons have a flat crown with no valve pockets, this is the correct head.
Quick Identification Chart
|
Feature |
1 mm Below (Short Valve) |
Flush (Long Valve) |
|
Valve Position |
~1 mm below head surface |
Flush with head surface |
|
Valve Length |
Short |
Long |
|
Piston Type |
Flat piston (no valve reliefs) |
Valve reliefs in piston |
|
Identification |
Measure valve height |
Measure valve height |
|
Safe to Identify by VIN? |
❌ No |
❌ No |
|
Safe to Identify by Year? |
❌ No |
❌ No |
The Only Reliable Method
There are only two reliable ways to identify your head:
Method 1 (Recommended)
Remove the cylinder head and inspect the pistons.
Flat piston (no valve reliefs)
➡ Install the 1 mm Below (Short Valve) head.
Valve reliefs in piston
➡ Install the Flush (Long Valve) head.
Method 2
Measure the valve face height on the old cylinder head.
- Flush with deck = Flush Valve Head
- Approximately 1 mm below deck = Short Valve Head
Don’t Skip Injector Testing
In our experience, injectors are one of the biggest contributors to cracked 1KZ cylinder heads.
A worn injector may still allow the engine to run well, but poor spray patterns or incorrect pop pressures can create extremely high combustion temperatures.
This leads to:
- High EGTs
- Localized hot spots
- Cracked cylinder heads
- Burnt valves
- Melted pistons
- Head gasket failure
Before installing a new cylinder head, always:
- ✔ Pressure test injectors
- ✔ Inspect spray pattern
- ✔ Check injector pop pressure
- ✔ Replace worn injector nozzles
A new cylinder head installed with faulty injectors is much more likely to fail again.
Don’t Forget the Cooling System
At HiYota, we’ve found that simply replacing the cylinder head rarely solves the underlying problem. That’s why we developed our Ultimate Cooling Package for the 1KZ-TE.
Our recommended upgrades include:
-
Modified High-Engagement Fan Clutch
- 10-Blade Cooling Fan
-
Genuine Toyota Thermostat
- Complete Cooling System Flush
-
EGR Block-Off Kit - 1kz-te
- 3” Turbo-Back Exhaust Side Dump
-
3" Turbo-Back Full Exhaust
- Coolant Temperature Gauge
-
EGT Gauge
These upgrades work together to lower coolant temperatures, reduce exhaust gas temperatures, improve airflow, and reduce thermal stress on the cylinder head.
You can read the full guide here:
Ultimate Cooling Package for Your Toyota HiAce H100
https://hiyotaparts.com/blogs/news/ultimate-cooling-package-for-your-hiace-h100
HiYota Rebuild Checklist
|
✔ Item |
Required |
|
Identify correct cylinder head |
✅ |
|
Pressure test injectors |
✅ |
|
Inspect spray pattern |
✅ |
|
Replace injector nozzles if required |
✅ |
|
Install OEM thermostat |
✅ |
|
Flush cooling system |
✅ |
|
Upgrade fan clutch |
⭐ |
|
Upgrade to 10-blade fan |
⭐ |
|
Install 3” exhaust |
⭐ |
|
Replace timing belt & water pump |
✅ |
|
Install new head bolts |
✅ |
|
Pressure test cooling system |
✅ |